Play With Docker gives you the experience of having a free Alpine Linux Virtual Machine in the cloud where you can build and run Docker containers and even create clusters with Docker features like Swarm Mode.
Under the hood DIND or Docker-in-Docker is used to give the effect of multiple VMs/PCs.
A live version is available at: http://play-with-docker.com/
Docker 1.13+ is required. You can use docker-machine with the following command:
docker-machine create -d virtualbox --virtualbox-boot2docker-url https://github.com/boot2docker/boot2docker/releases/download/v1.13.0-rc1/boot2docker.iso <name>
The docker daemon needs to run in swarm mode because PWD uses overlay attachable networks. For that
just run docker swarm init
.
It's also necessary to manually load the IPVS kernel module because as swarms are created in dind
,
the daemon won't load it automatically. Run the following command for that purpose: sudo modprobe xt_ipvs
If you are developing, there is a Makefile
file with 2 targets that can set the whole environment for you (using docker-machine and virtual box).
Just run once make prepare
, which will create & prepare the docker-machine environment.
Additionally, every time you want to start you environment run make start
.
And to start the application on a container on the docker machine host, run: eval $(docker-machine env pwd) && docker-compose up
Start the Docker daemon on your machine and run docker pull franela/dind
.
-
Install go 1.7.1 with
brew
on Mac or through a package manager. -
go get -v -d -t ./...
-
Start PWD as a container with docker-compose up.
-
Point to http://localhost:3000/ and click "New Instance"
Notes:
- There is a hard-coded limit to 5 Docker playgrounds per session. After 4 hours sessions are deleted.
- If you want to override the DIND version or image then set the environmental variable i.e.
DIND_IMAGE=franela/docker<version>-rc:dind
. Take into account that you can't use standarddind
images, only franela ones work.
We're planning to setup a reverse proxy that handles redirection automatically, in the meantime you can use ngrok within PWD running docker run --name supergrok -d jpetazzo/supergrok
then docker logs --follow supergrok
, it will give you a ngrok URL, now you can go to that URL and add the IP+port that you want to connect to… e.g. if your PWD instance is 10.0.42.3, you can go to http://xxxxxx.ngrok.io/10.0.42.3:8000 (where the xxxxxx is given to you in the supergrok logs).
If you need to access your services from outside, use the following URL pattern http://ip<underscore_ip>-<port>.play-with-docker.com
(i.e: http://ip10_2_135_3-80.play-with-docker.com/).